1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2010
Summary
The author of the books of Chronicles lived during a period in which one of the major issues for the Jewish people was the precise definition of the extent of its own community. Before the exile to Babylon, this was less of a problem, because the community was co-extensive for the most part with the nations of Israel and Judah. The loss of sovereignty, however, combined with the divisions caused by the transportation of many of the leaders to Babylon and the later return to the land, created a quite new situation in which the ‘terms of membership’ had to be redefined. The emergence of the Samaritan sect and the secession of the group responsible for the Dead Sea Scrolls are only two of a number of witnesses which demonstrate that this question was not quickly resolved.
In the present study, an attempt is made to analyse one contribution to the debate. This is not by any means to imply that the Chronicler had only one purpose in writing his history; it is evident, however, that in the circumstances of his day he could hardly avoid giving some attention to this question, and furthermore it will emerge that in fact he does present a distinctive point of view which is of value in the attempt to unravel the lines of thought in a period for which we have notoriously few sources.
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- Israel in the Books of Chronicles , pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1977